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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Rude and hilarious, February 14, 1999
It's a pity this book, first published in 1963, is out of print. Though not one of Kingsley Amis's better known novels, it is brim full of his usual brio and highly intelligent writing style. The title character in this case is Roger Micheldene, a dyspeptic Englishman in America for two weeks who is at odds with everyone he meets. Roger, who considers himself "qualified in gluttony, sloth and lust but distinguished in anger," feels himself surrounded by idiots and frequently lets them know it. He spends most of the novel trying to get into bed with the wife of a friend, or indeed any woman, and thoroughly disrupting Anglo-American relations in the process. Amis manages to make us like, or at least be interested in, a person whose chief behavior trait is "being awful." Fortunately, he surrounds Roger with a panoply of vivid secondary characters, such as the American literary agent who is crazy about all things British, the obnoxiously smart college student, the persistent priest who sees in Roger a soul in conflict. In his quest for self-gratification, Roger loses as often as he wins, but the contests are extremely entertaining and the author's observations about American and British sensibilities are priceless.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Many witty lines, but overall sour and dyspeptic, May 13, 2011
Roger Micheldene is an Englishman, forty-ish, who works for a publishing house and is in the States on a two-week trip, part business and part pleasure. For Roger, pleasure consists of gluttony, brow-beating virtually all males he comes across, and fornicating with just about all females. He is abominable. He also is fat - a bothersome handicap in the sexual chase. As the novel opens, Roger is beside a swimming pool on a warm Indian Summer afternoon; others join him, some to go swimming, including a woman he keenly wants to bed. Perspiring heavily, Roger removes his tan-and-slate tweed jacket. "He would have liked to take off far more than his jacket, but knew he was the wrong shape for this. For instance, his mammary development would have been acceptable only if he could have shed half his weight as well as changing his sex." Hence, many of Roger's coups occur in dimly lit places, with women who are either as soused and/or as randy as he.
Kingsley Amis works this shtick to a fair-thee-well. He has one other comedic theme: the differences in speech, custom, and culture between the Brits and the Yanks. It, too, is over-flogged. There are many witty lines - this is Kingsley Amis, after all - but overall ONE FAT ENGLISHMAN is sour and dyspeptic. It is the sixth, and least by far, of the Kingsley Amis novels I have read. I cannot warmly recommend it, even to Amis enthusiasts.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Treatise on Anglo-American Relations, March 8, 2011
I have read several Amis novels recently, and I have noticed that they all seem to be written at a different pace. 'Take a Girl Like You', for instance, is carefully constructed, an artful comic novel. 'I Like it Here', is a very relaxed meditation, full of droll asides, almost Amis talking to himself.
'One Fat Englishman' however is a full on assault. Micheldene is fat, lustful, greedy and has a Rottweiler of a temper. On the other hand, he is searingly bright and hilarious.
This book could not be published today. No publisher would print, I shouldn't think, a novel containing so many comments so overtly sexist and racist.
Another point: I should think you could read this novel as a commentary on Anglo-American relations at any time since 1774.
Unmissable.
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